2012 Infiniti QX56 Review

I can definitively say that I would like to ride around in it as a passenger
every day; seating seven or eight people, it's cush and totally luxurious. As it
should be: Padded with plenty of extras, my four-wheel-drive test vehicle came
priced at an exorbitant $75,340. I may very well have to choose between this
opulent, luxurious SUV and sending my kids to college. College is overrated,
don't you think? My zoology degree is doing nothing for me. (Compare the
four-wheel-drive version to the slightly less expensive two-wheel-drive version
here.)

The QX56 manages to quell the myth that all SUVs are trucky and rugged.
Instead, this beauty seeps comfort and luxury from every pore. Its
private-jet-inspired interior is draped in gently gathered, buttery-soft
leather, with all the extras that even the prissiest prima donnas among us would
love. My favorites? Heated and cooled front seats, heated second-row seats for
my prissy biological offspring (I say that lovingly), and a heated steering
wheel that's just as comforting as warming my hands on a cup of cocoa.

Little has changed between the 2011 and 2012 QX; see the two compared here.

See also:

Warning signals
To help prevent the vehicle from moving unexpectedly by erroneous operation of the Intelligent Key listed on the following chart or to help prevent the vehicle from being stolen, chime or beep sounds ...

Displaying user guide
If you use the INFINITI Voice Recognition system for the first time or you do not know how to operate it, you can display the User Guide for confirmation.
You can confirm how to use voice commands by ...

Blind Sport Intervention (BSI)
The latest in a list of world-first safety features from Infiniti, BSI takes
blind-spot technology to another level by introducing an element of side
collision protection. As well as giving the dr ...